TOEIC Score Chart: Requirements, CEFR Mapping, and Tips to Improve

Complete TOEIC score guide with score chart, employer requirements by industry, CEFR level mapping, and proven strategies to improve your TOEIC score quickly.

TOEIC - Test of English for International CommunicationBy Dr. Yuki TanakaMar 19, 202611 min read
TOEIC Score Chart: Requirements, CEFR Mapping, and Tips to Improve

The TOEIC Listening and Reading test is scored on a scale of 10 to 990, with each section (Listening and Reading) scored separately from 5 to 495. Most employers in international business require minimum scores between 600 and 850 depending on the role. A score of 785 or above maps to CEFR B2 (upper intermediate) and satisfies most workplace English requirements. Score improvements of 100 to 200 points are achievable within 8 to 12 weeks of focused preparation by targeting specific weak areas in Listening Parts 3-4 and Reading Part 7, which together account for over 60 percent of the total test questions.

Candidates preparing for cefr can build exam confidence with our CEFR English level test 2026, which covers all key topics and question formats used in the real assessment.

Students and professionals improving their reading comprehension skills can benchmark with our reading comprehension practice test 2026, which covers inference, main idea, vocabulary-in-context, and author-purpose question types.

TOEIC Score Quick Reference

  • 10-250: Novice level — minimal workplace English ability
  • 255-400: Elementary — basic interactions only
  • 405-600: Intermediate — routine communication with support
  • 605-780: Upper Intermediate — handles most business tasks
  • 785-900: Advanced — confident in all business situations
  • 905-990: Expert — near-native workplace proficiency
  • Most employer requirement: 600 to 850 minimum
  • CEFR B2 threshold: 785 points

TOEIC Score Chart and What Each Level Means

Your TOEIC score tells employers and institutions exactly what you can and cannot do in English in a workplace setting. Each score range corresponds to specific communication abilities that have been validated through extensive research by ETS.

Detailed score breakdown:

905-990: International Professional Proficiency

At this level, you can communicate effectively and confidently in virtually any English-speaking business situation. You understand nuanced language, idioms, and implied meanings in both spoken and written English. You can follow complex arguments in meetings, understand detailed technical documents, and comprehend English at native speed without difficulty. Fewer than 5 percent of test-takers globally achieve scores in this range.

785-900: Working Proficiency Plus

You can handle most business communication competently with occasional minor errors that do not impede understanding. You follow the main points and most details in meetings, presentations, and phone calls. You can read and understand most business documents including contracts, reports, and technical specifications. You can draft professional emails and reports with generally accurate grammar and vocabulary. This is the range most multinational employers target for positions requiring regular English communication.

605-780: Limited Working Proficiency

You can handle routine business communication but may struggle with complex, abstract, or specialized topics. You understand the main ideas in meetings but may miss specific details, especially when speakers talk quickly or use unfamiliar vocabulary. You can read straightforward business documents but need more time for complex material. You may need to ask for clarification or repetition in conversations. Many entry-level international positions accept scores in this range.

405-600: Elementary Proficiency Plus

You can handle basic workplace interactions such as greetings, simple requests, and short routine conversations. You understand simple written notices, short emails, and basic forms. You struggle with meetings, phone calls, and longer documents. You can express basic needs but cannot participate meaningfully in business discussions. This range is typical for employees in roles where English is secondary to their primary job function.

255-400: Elementary Proficiency

You can understand very simple spoken and written English in highly predictable contexts. You recognize common words and phrases related to everyday situations. You cannot function independently in an English-speaking workplace and would require significant language support.

10-250: Novice

Minimal English comprehension. You may recognize isolated words but cannot understand sentences or connected speech. This score indicates that extensive English language training is needed before the individual can use English in any professional capacity.

TOEIC - Test of English for International Communication TOEIC Score Chart and What Each Level Means study guide illustration

Employer and Institution Score Requirements

TOEIC score requirements vary significantly by industry, role level, and region. Understanding what scores employers actually require helps you set concrete preparation goals rather than aiming vaguely for "a good score."

Corporate requirements by industry:

  • Technology companies: Most require 700 to 800 for engineering roles where English is needed for documentation and international collaboration. Customer-facing roles typically require 800+.
  • Financial services: Banks and financial institutions generally require 750 to 850 for analyst and relationship management positions. Back-office roles may accept 600+.
  • Manufacturing: Production and quality roles typically require 500 to 650. Management and international coordination roles require 700 to 800.
  • Consulting: Major consulting firms require 800+ for client-facing consultants. Internal operations roles may accept 650 to 750.
  • Hospitality and tourism: Front-desk and guest relations roles typically require 600 to 750. Management positions require 750+.
  • Aviation: Airlines typically require 600 to 700 for cabin crew and 700+ for pilots and air traffic controllers.

Specific company requirements (publicly available):

  • Samsung: 900+ for overseas positions, 700+ for domestic positions requiring English
  • LG Electronics: 800+ for international roles
  • Hyundai: 750+ for positions involving English communication
  • Toyota: 730+ for management-track positions
  • Rakuten: 800+ mandatory for all employees (English is the company's official language)
  • Airbus: 750+ for engineering and management roles

University and educational requirements:

  • Japanese universities: Many require 600 to 730 for graduation or course exemption
  • Korean universities: Typical graduation requirements range from 700 to 800
  • French grandes ecoles: Often require 750 to 850 for degree programs
  • Exchange programs: Most international exchange programs require 650 to 750

Government and immigration:

  • Canada: TOEIC is not directly accepted for immigration but may be used by some Provincial Nominee Programs as supporting evidence
  • Japan: Many government agencies require 600+ for positions involving English communication
  • South Korea: Government hiring exams give bonus points for TOEIC scores above certain thresholds

To benchmark your current abilities against these requirements, take the Reading Comprehension practice test for an initial diagnostic of your Reading section performance.

TOEIC to CEFR Level Mapping

The Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR) is the international standard for describing language proficiency. Many employers, especially in Europe, use CEFR levels rather than raw TOEIC scores when specifying language requirements. Understanding the mapping allows you to translate your TOEIC score into terms that European employers recognize.

Official ETS TOEIC-CEFR mapping:

  • C1 (Effective Operational Proficiency): TOEIC Listening 490+, Reading 455+, Total 945+
  • B2 (Vantage/Upper Intermediate): TOEIC Listening 400+, Reading 385+, Total 785+
  • B1 (Threshold/Intermediate): TOEIC Listening 275+, Reading 275+, Total 550+
  • A2 (Waystage/Elementary): TOEIC Listening 110+, Reading 115+, Total 225+
  • A1 (Breakthrough/Beginner): TOEIC Listening 60+, Reading 60+, Total 120+

What CEFR levels mean in practice:

  • C1: You can use English flexibly and effectively for social, academic, and professional purposes. You can produce clear, well-structured text on complex subjects. Most senior international roles require this level.
  • B2: You can interact with native speakers fluently enough that interaction is comfortable for both parties. You can produce detailed text on a wide range of subjects. This is the most commonly required level for international business roles.
  • B1: You can deal with most situations likely to arise while traveling or working in an English-speaking environment. You can produce simple connected text on familiar topics. Sufficient for roles with limited English communication needs.
  • A2: You can understand sentences and frequently used expressions related to immediate relevance (personal information, shopping, local geography, employment). Insufficient for most professional English communication requirements.

Important notes about the mapping:

  • The TOEIC Listening and Reading test only measures receptive skills (understanding), not productive skills (speaking and writing). A high TOEIC L&R score does not guarantee equivalent speaking ability.
  • CEFR levels are holistic — they describe overall language ability across all four skills. The TOEIC L&R mapping should be considered an estimate of receptive skill levels only.
  • If an employer requires "B2 English," they may want evidence of both receptive and productive skills. In that case, combining a TOEIC L&R score with a TOEIC Speaking and Writing score provides more complete evidence.
Toeic to Cefr Level Mapping guide - TOEIC - Test of English for International Communication certification study resource

Proven Strategies to Improve Your Score

Improving your TOEIC score requires targeted preparation rather than general English study. The following strategies focus on the specific skills and question types that produce the greatest score gains in the shortest time.

Strategy 1: Focus on high-impact sections first

Not all TOEIC sections contribute equally to your total score. Parts 3, 4, and 7 together account for 123 of the 200 questions (61.5 percent). Improving your performance on these three parts has the greatest impact on your total score:

  • Part 3 (Conversations, 39 questions): Read all three questions BEFORE the audio plays. This tells you what to listen for. Focus on understanding the overall situation rather than every individual word.
  • Part 4 (Talks, 30 questions): Same strategy as Part 3. Pay special attention to the first and last sentences of each talk — they typically contain the main idea and the conclusion or next step.
  • Part 7 (Reading Comprehension, 54 questions): Read the questions first, then scan the passage for answers. Do not read every word of every passage — scan for keywords from the questions. Practice the Reading Comprehension Passages Part 7 practice test to build scanning speed for multi-passage question sets.

Strategy 2: Master time management in Reading

The Reading section gives you 75 minutes for 100 questions. Many test-takers run out of time and leave Part 7 questions unanswered, losing easy points. Optimal time allocation:

  • Part 5: 10 minutes maximum (20 seconds per question — if you do not know the answer in 20 seconds, guess and move on)
  • Part 6: 10 minutes maximum (2.5 minutes per passage)
  • Part 7: 55 minutes (this is where the most questions are and where extra time pays the biggest dividends)

Strategy 3: Build vocabulary strategically

TOEIC uses business English vocabulary consistently. Focus on these high-frequency topic areas:

  • Office procedures and equipment (memorandum, agenda, itinerary, invoice, quotation)
  • Human resources (recruitment, probation, promotion, resignation, benefits)
  • Finance and accounting (revenue, expenditure, quarterly, fiscal year, audit)
  • Marketing and sales (campaign, demographics, market share, survey, endorsement)
  • Travel and logistics (itinerary, accommodation, customs, freight, dispatch)

Strategy 4: Practice with realistic timing

Complete at least one full-length timed practice test per week during your preparation period. This builds the stamina needed for 2 hours of sustained concentration and helps you identify which parts slow you down the most.

Strategy 5: Improve your weakest section disproportionately

If your Listening score is 350 and your Reading score is 250, focusing on Reading will produce faster score gains than trying to push your already-stronger Listening higher. The first 50 to 100 points of improvement in a weak area are easier to achieve than the last 50 points in a strong area.

Start your targeted preparation with the Reading Comprehension practice test to identify specific question types where you lose the most points.

Proven Strategies to Improve Your Score overview for TOEIC - Test of English for International Communication exam preparation

TOEIC Score Questions and Answers

About the Author

Dr. Yuki TanakaPhD Applied Linguistics, MA TESOL

Applied Linguist & Language Proficiency Exam Specialist

Georgetown University

Dr. Yuki Tanaka holds a PhD in Applied Linguistics and an MA in TESOL from Georgetown University. A former language examiner with the British Council, she has 18 years of experience designing and teaching language proficiency preparation courses for TOEFL, IELTS, CELPIP, Duolingo English Test, JLPT, Cambridge FCE/CAE, and Versant assessments worldwide.